Abstract

The present study investigated 2-month-olds' abilities to discriminate allophonic differences that are potentially useful in segmenting fluent speech. Experiment 1 investigated infants' sensitivity to the kind of distinction that may signal the presence or absence of a word boundary. When tested with the high-amplitude sucking procedure, infants discriminated pairs of items, such as "nitrate" versus "night rate" and "nikrate" versus "nike rate". By greatly reducing the potential contribution of prosodic differences to these contrasts, Experiment 2 evaluated whether the allophonic differences for /t/ and /r/ were sufficient for infants to distinguish the "nitrate" versus "night rate" pair. Infants distinguished "nitrate" from a cross-spliced version of "night rate," which differed only in the allophones for /t/ and /r/ that it included. Thus, infants appear to possess one of the prerequisite capacities (i.e., the ability to discriminate allophonic distinctions) necessary to use allophonic information in segmenting fluent speech.

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